• @[email protected]
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    510 hours ago

    Or just a little dongle with both of these ports which can be plugged in on any usb-c on any side?

    Dongles break, slide off, cause disconnects, can cause internal damage to the connector if the cables you have to connect are heavy, etc…, I already have the bad experience of having to use a USB hub to attach storage.

    When it comes to engineering, I’m of the opinion that built-in > bolt in.

    • @[email protected]
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      110 hours ago

      Heavy cables are just stupid no matter the port used, or dongle. Dongles do not brake faster than normal ports do. Normal ports do internal damage just the same way. “Cause disconnects”, only if damaged.

      I don’t have problems with my dongle (which I had to use like only 2 times a year, anyway)

      • @Mr_Dr_Oink
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        58 hours ago

        Wait!.. You don’t have problems with something you only used twice in a year? No way!

        Its clear you and the person you replied to have different use cases for your devices, and perhaps what they are saying is just as valid as what you are saying.

        • @[email protected]
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          24 hours ago

          The PITA is that I use RJ45 pretty much every day. It’s not just a matter of “oh there’s wifi everywhere”; 99% of wifis everywhere are not open, or are actually not connected to the networks I’m working on, or I need the physical connector to diagnose wire / networking issues; and the performance of wifi on Linux on refurbrished machines tends to be subpar and they tend to not allow for “developer mode” options (playing with your MAC, WPA supplanting, etc).

          If Tesla, the actual Tesla, had given us technology instead of the thief Elon Edison, then perhaps we’d somehow have point-to-point wireless RJ45 that would function everywhere, and I wouldn’t need the connector.